Forum Topic

futurepaleontologist1
MemberCompsognathusJun-10-2013 11:02 PMNow, even though this predates the dinosaurs, it opens up the way for dinosaurs to evolve. Now, I've heard many theories on how this extinction began, but I wanna hear what you guys think, so throw it at me, and state your facts!
Pity is for the living. Envy is for the dead.
-Mark Twain
4 Replies

x_paden_x
MemberCompsognathusJun-10-2013 11:23 PMIm highly curious, what was on the earth before dinosaurs...
i know evolution was at work, And such, but what was before there was even sea creatures swimming around!?!?!!?
every ones so focused about the Cretaceous extinction... we've never really studied the previous ones.... Wouldn't it be ironic if that was our downfall...
I believe that most extinctions are from some form of destruction in the food chain... thus sending shockwaves to many species killing off many....Or from something in the eco system...
Life cannot be contained, it breaks walls, crashes through barriers sometimes painfully, but uh... Life uh, finds a way

futurepaleontologist1
MemberCompsognathusJun-10-2013 11:39 PMDude, you need to watch walking with monsters. Best Paleazoic documentary ever! And before even the Cambrian and the Ediacarans. Just water, cells, and a crap load of volcanic explosions and meteorite hits. And btw, maybe so, but was it a meteorite impact, volcanic activity? What's the major culprit here? Ohh, and you also need to watch Animal Armegeddon. It has all the mass extinctions our planet has ever faced, and many of those episodes are Paleozoic era extinctions, so they're before the dinosaurs. The first one was in the Silurian era and it helped super size the Eurypterid into a gigantic Pterygotis
Pity is for the living. Envy is for the dead.
-Mark Twain

futurepaleontologist1
MemberCompsognathusJun-10-2013 11:43 PMBtw, walking with monsters is on Netflix, Animal Armegeddon is on YouTube. Anyway, back to the main topic. I know that eventually the food chain collapsed and the environment kinda fell apart, but what caused all that? A meteorite impact? Volcanic activity? I'd like to know what you guys think is the major culprit and why.
Pity is for the living. Envy is for the dead.
-Mark Twain

Rex Fan 684
MemberCompsognathusJun-11-2013 12:56 PMWell, at this time, Pangaea was forming. This would have caused environment to become drier. I feel this would have had something to do with it. Droughts would have caused plants to whither, herbivores die followed by the predators. Reptiles that could slow their heartbeat and "hibernate" along with a few other creatures would have made it through. My opinion.
[img]http://olympics.wikibruce.com/images/thumb/6/6b/6_2_Pangaea.jpg/320px-6_2_Pangaea.jpg[/img]
"Men like me don't start the wars. We just die in them. We've always died in them, and we always will. We don't expect any praise for it, no parades. No one knows our names."
―Alpha-98
Add A Reply